Maritime ArchaeologyCambridge University Press, 1978 - 270 pages Archaeology has made enormous advances recently, both in volume of discoveries and in its character as an intellectual discipline; new techniques have helped to further the range and rigour of enquiry, and encouraged interdisciplinary communication. The aim of this series is to make available to a wider audience the results of these developments. The coverage will be world-wide and will extend from the earliest period to medieval and industrial archaeology. |
Table des matières
The constraints of work under water | 24 |
The contribution of current work under water | 59 |
The unrealised potential of maritime archaeology | 127 |
Part | 154 |
The archaeology of ships | 215 |
Theory and practice | 248 |
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Expressions et termes fréquents
amphorae analysis anchors appears aqualung archaeological evidence artefacts aspects backstaff Bass boat Bronze Age Cape Gelidonya cargo centimetres century A.D. chapter Class coast concerned considerable context craft Dartmouth 1690 deposit discipline discussion distribution divers diving documentary evidence Doorninck East Indiaman example excavation fact George Bass Greenhill 1976 harbour hull important indicated interpretation investigation involved iron keel Kennemerland 1664 Kyrenia ship land large number later maritime archaeology Martin Mary Rose material medieval Mediterranean metres metres long Muckelroy Museum naval Nemi ships objects particular period planking post-medieval potential present preserved probably problems procedures range recent remains represented Roman salvage sea-bed seafaring sediments ship ship's shipbuilding shipwreck significance similar situation Spanish Spanish Armada stern structure sub-discipline suggested surface survived techniques timbers tion topic totally trade tradition Trinidad Valencera underwater sites van Doorninck vessel Viking warships wreck wreck-site Yassi Ada